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Liquibase Gradle Plugin

A plugin for Gradle that allows you to use Liquibase to manage your database upgrades. This project was created by Tim Berglund, and is currently maintained by Steve Saliman.

Usage

To use the plugin with Gradle 2.1 or later, add the following to your build.gradle file.

plugins {
  id 'org.liquibase.gradle' version '1.2.4'
}

To use the plugin with Gradle 2.0 or older, add the following to build.gradle:

buildscript {
    repositories {
        mavenCentral()
    }
    dependencies {
        classpath "org.liquibase:liquibase-gradle-plugin:1.2.4"
    }
}
apply plugin: 'org.liquibase.gradle'

Example

For an example of how to configure and use this plugin, see the Liquibase Workshop repo. That project contains a build.gradle showing exactly how to configure the plugin, and an example directory setup as well.

News

March 5, 2017

Version 1.2.4 is a minor release that fixes a bug with the excludeObjects and includeObjects options.

February 25, 2017

The previous release of this plugin had a broken dependency. Version 1.2.3 fixes this issue. Please do not use version 1.2.2.

February 20, 2017

The plugin has been updated to use the latest Groovy DSL, and I've worked around a Liquibase argument parsing bug.

November 30, 2015

The plugin has been updated to support Liquibase 3.4.2.

August 3, 2015

The plugin has been updated to support Liquibase 3.3.5.

May 16, 2015

We are proud to announce that the Liquibase Gradle Plugin is now a part of the Liquibase organization. I will continue maintain the code, but bringing this project into the Liquibase organization will help keep all things Liquibase together in one place. This will help promote Liquibase adoption by making it easier for more people to use, and it will help people stay up to date with the latest releases. As part of that move, the artifact name has changed from net.saliman:gradle-liquibase-plugin to org.liquibase:liquibase-gradle-plugin to be consistent with the rest of the Liquibase artifacts. Also, starting with plugin version 1.1.0, the plugin is available via the official Gradle plugin portal. A special thank you to Nathan Voxland for his help and support in bringing the Liquibase project and the Groovy Plugin together into one home.

March 9, 2015

The plugin has been updated to support Liquibase 3.3.2. Version 1.0.2 fixes a bug that prevented Groovy changelogs from working in Java versions before JDK 8. As part of this release, I've bumped the version of Groovy that the plugin uses. This can cause issues in Gradle 1.x. The workaround is to add classpath 'org.codehaus.groovy:groovy-backports-compat23:2.3.5' to the buildscript dependencies.

September 10, 2014

This plugin is designed to be a wrapper for the Liquibase project, so it creates tasks to match the various Liquibase commands. This can cause conflicts with tasks that other plugins create, so we've added the ability to add a prefix to all the tasks this plugin creates. See the Usage section for more details.

June 15, 2014

We are proud to announce the long awaited release of version 1.0.0 of the Gradle Liquibase Plugin. Version 1.0.0 uses version the latest release of Liquibase (3.1.1), and it appears to work fine with both Gradle 1.x releases as well as the upcoming Gradle 2.0 release.

Tim Berglund has asked me to take on the continued maintenance of this plugin, so I've had to change the maven group ID to one for which I have permission to publish on Maven Central. Going forward, this plugin will be available under the net.saliman group id. The artifact ID, gradle-liquibase-plugin will remain the same.

My thanks to Tim for the opportunity to help out with this great plugin.

Steve Saliman

Version 1.0.0 of the Liquibase plugin uses Liquibase 3, instead of Liquibase 2, and several things have been deprecated from the Groovy DSL to maintain compatibility with Liquibase XML. A list of deprecated items can be found in the README for the Groovy DSL project in the Usage section. To upgrade to version 1.0.0, we strongly recommend the following procedure:

  1. Make sure all of your Liquibase managed databases are up to date by running gradle update on them before upgrading to version 1.0.0 of the Liquibase plugin.

  2. Create a new, throw away database to test your Liquibase change sets. Run gradle update on the new database using the latest version of the Liquibase plugin. This is important because of the deprecated items in the Groovy DSL, and because there are some subtle differences in the ways the different Liquibase versions generate SQL. For example, adding a default value to a boolean column in MySql using defaultValue: "0" worked fine in Liquibase 2, but in Liquibase 3, it generates SQL that doesn't work for MySql - defaultValueNumeric: 0 needs to be used instead.

  3. Once you are sure all of your change sets work with the latest Liquibase plugin, clear all checksums that were calculated by Liquibase 2 by running gradle clearChecksums against all databases.

  4. Finally, run gradle changeLogSync on all databases to calculate new checksums.

Configuring the plugin in version 1.0.0 is different from previous versions. The Liquibase configuration now goes in a liquibase block of the build.gradle file instead of separate blocks. The changelogs and database closures have been merged into a single activities closure with methods instead of variables. The defaultDatabase and defaultChangelogs variables have been replaced with the optional runList variable.

For example:

changelogs {
  main {
    file = file('src/main/db/changelogs.groovy')
  }
}

databases {
  myDB {
    url = 'jdbc:mysql://localhost:3306/my_db'
	username= 'myusername'
	password = 'mypassword'
  }
}
defaultDatabase = databases.myDB
defaultChangeLogs = changelogs

Became:

liquibase {
  activities {
    main {
      changeLogFile 'src/main/db/changelogs.groovy'
      url 'jdbc:mysql://localhost:3306/my_db'
	  username 'myusername'
	  password 'mypassword'
    }
  }
}

Usage

The Liquibase plugin allows you to use Liquibase to manage database updates. You can parse changesets using any Liquibase parser that is in the classpath. Some parsers, such as the XML parser and the YAML parser, are part of Liquiabse itself, although some parsers require you to add additional dependencies to the buildscript. For example, the YAML parser requires org.yaml:snakeyaml:1.15.

This plugin adds support for the the Groovy DSL, which is a much nicer way to write changelogs, especially since Groovy is the language of Gradle scripts themselves. The Groovy DSL syntax intended to mirror the Liquibase XML syntax directly, such that mapping elements and attributes from the Liquibase documentation to Groovy builder syntax will result in a valid changelog. Hence this DSL is not documented separately from the Liquibase XML format. However there are some minor differences or enhancements to the XML format, and there are some gaping holes in Liquibase's documentation of the XML. Those holes are filled, and differences explained in the documentation on the Groovy Liquibase DSL project page. To use the Groovy DSL, simply specify a changeLogFile that ends in .groovy. For those who, for some reason, still prefer XML, JSON, or Yaml, you can use these formats by specifying a changeLogFile that ends in the appropriate extension, and Liquibase will find and use the correct parser.

The Liquibase plugin is meant to be a light weight front end for the Liquibase command line utility. When the liquibase plugin is applied, it creates a Gradle task for each command supported by Liquibase. gradle tasks will list out these tasks. The Liquibase Documentation describes what each command does and what parameters each command uses. If you want to prefix each task to avoid task name conflicts, set a value for the liquibaseTaskPrefix property. This will tell the liquibase plugin to capitalize the task name and prefix it with the given prefix. For example, if Gradle is invoked with -PliquibaseTaskPrefix=liquibase, or you put liquibaseTaskPrefix=liquibase in gradle.properties then this plugin will create tasks named liquibaseUpdate, liquibaseTag, etc.

Parameters for the commands are configured in the liquibase block inside the build.gradle file. This block contains a series of, "activities", each defining a series of Liquibase parameters. Any method in an "activity" is assumed to be a Liquibase command line parameter. For example, including changeLogFile 'myfile.groovy' in an activity does the same thing as --changeLogfile=myfile.groovy would do on the command line. Including difftypes 'data' in an activity does the same thing as difftypes=data would do on the command line, etc. The Liquibase documentation details all the valid command line parameters. The liquibase block also has an optional "runList", which determines which activities are run for each task. If no runList is defined, the Liquibase Plugin will run all the activities. NOTE: the order of execution when there is no runList is not guaranteed.

Example:

Let's suppose that for each deployment, you need to update the data model for your application's database, and wou also need to run some SQL statements in a separate database used for security. Additionally, you want to occasionally run a diff between the changelog and the database. The liquibase block might look like this:

liquibase {
  activities {
    main {
      changeLogFile 'src/main/db/main.groovy'
      url project.ext.mainUrl
      username project.ext.mainUsername
      password project.ext.mainPassword
    }
    security {
      changeLogFile 'src/main/db/security.groovy'
      url project.ext.securityUrl
      username project.ext.securityUsername
      password project.ext.securityPassword
    }
    diffMain {
      changeLogFile 'src/main/db/main.groovy'
      url project.ext.mainUrl
      username project.ext.mainUsername
      password project.ext.mainPassword
      difftypes 'data'
    }
  }
  runList = project.ext.runList
}

Some things to keep in mind when setting up the liquibase block:

  1. We only need one activity block for each type of activity. In the example above, the database credentials are driven by build properties so that the correct database can be specified at build time so that you don't need a separate activity for each database.

  2. By making the value of runList a property, you can determine the activities that get run at build time. For example, if you didn't need to run the security updates in the CI environment, you could type gradle update -PrunList=main For environments where you do need the security updates, you would use gradle update -PrunList='main,security'. To do a diff, you'd run gradle diff -PrunList=diffMain. This use of properties is the reason the runList is a string and not an array.

  3. The methods in each activity block are meant to be pass-throughs to Liquibase. Any valid Liquibase command parameter is a legal method here. The command parameters are parameters in the Liquibase documentation that start with a -- such as --difftypes or --logLevel. For example, if you wanted to increase the log level, you could add logLevel debug to the activity.

  4. In addition to the command pass-through methods of an activity, there is a changeLogParameters method. This method takes a map, and is used to setup token substitution in the changeLogs. See the Liquibase documentation for more details on token substitution.

  5. Some Liquibase commands like tag and rollback require a value, in this case a tag name. Since the value will likely change from run to run, the command value is not configured in the liquibase block. To supply a command value, add -PliquibaseCommandValue=<value> to the gradle command.

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A Gradle plugin for Liquibase

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